Will truth survive? Fake news is easier to generate, faster to distribute and harder to disprove than ever before. Some wonder how we will get through this rapid escalation of online dishonesty.
Fake news and fantasy: 2023 in misinformation
Will truth survive? Fake news is easier to generate, faster to distribute and harder to disprove than ever before. Some wonder how we will get through this rapid escalation of online dishonesty.
The pope in a puffer coat. Donald Trump tackled to the ground by policemen. Joe Biden with a corn-coloured mullet.
How many of these images did you see and believe? The rapid development of artificial intelligence technologies this year has allowed fake news stories to flourishGrow or develop in a healthy or vigorous way.. All it takes is an idea, and anyone can make it into a reality.
More than 85% of people are worried about the impact of online disinformationFalse information intended to mislead, including propaganda, which all too often encourages the spread of misinformation, fake news spread by mistake. It is contrasted with misinformation, which may be spread accidentally. , with 87% concerned that it has already harmed their country's politics.1
What were the biggest fake news stories of this year? In January, a flurry of activists rushed to social media to claim that America will ban all gas stoves in an attempt to reduce emissions, sparking widespread controversy.
In February, images and videos shared online appeared to show a nuclear plant exploding due to the earthquake in Turkey and Syria.
In June, a submersible bound for a tour of the Titanic went missing in the North Atlantic, containing five people. A deepfake CNN article went viral claiming that the submersible had been found with its passengers mysteriously missing.
In September, party-goers in the Nevada Desert attending the annual Burning Man festival were stranded by flooding. Social media users claimed that attendees had contracted the Ebola virus.
In October, French intelligence alleged that the bedbug panic sweeping Paris had been stoked by KremlinA central fortress in a city, used to refer to a complex in Moscow with five palaces and four cathedrals. The Russian government is run from within this citadel. propagandistsA person who disseminates propaganda. seeking to destabilise the western world.2
And this month, social media users spread the claim that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky had splashed out on two multimillion-dollar luxury yachts.3
Some worry that the quality of fake news is only getting higher, whilst our media literacyThe ability to apply critical thinking skills to mass media. is declining. With several vital global elections due to take place next year, some say we need to build a handbook for determining what is real.
Will truth survive?
Yes: There is lots of fake news, but it is almost always quickly debunked. Right now, it is still possible to tell the difference between AI-generated fake news and real stories, provided you have a degree of media literacy.
No: It is becoming easier to generate believable fake news for free. It can come from anywhere and be distributed widely on social media within minutes. Soon it will be impossible for us to keep up with what is real and what is fake.
Or... It is not truth we need to protect, but imagination. With imagination, we can imagine new possibilities for our lives; fake news is designed to trap us in narrow-minded and prejudiced perspectives.
Keywords
Flourish - Grow or develop in a healthy or vigorous way.
Disinformation - False information intended to mislead, including propaganda, which all too often encourages the spread of misinformation, fake news spread by mistake. It is contrasted with misinformation, which may be spread accidentally.
Kremlin - A central fortress in a city, used to refer to a complex in Moscow with five palaces and four cathedrals. The Russian government is run from within this citadel.
Propagandists - A person who disseminates propaganda.
Media literacy - The ability to apply critical thinking skills to mass media.
Fake news and fantasy: 2023 in misinformation
Glossary
Flourish - Grow or develop in a healthy or vigorous way.
Disinformation - False information intended to mislead, including propaganda, which all too often encourages the spread of misinformation, fake news spread by mistake. It is contrasted with misinformation, which may be spread accidentally.
Kremlin - A central fortress in a city, used to refer to a complex in Moscow with five palaces and four cathedrals. The Russian government is run from within this citadel.
Propagandists - A person who disseminates propaganda.
Media literacy - The ability to apply critical thinking skills to mass media.